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McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter, is a Newark-based law firm. According to the National Law Journal's 2014 NLJ 350 ranking of firms based on size, McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter, has 274 attorneys and is the 162nd largest firm in the United States. With $122,500,000 in gross revenue in 2013, the firm placed 181st on The American Lawyer's 2014 Am Law 200 ranking. The firm has offices in CO, CT, DE, MA, NJ, NY and PA.

In the News

McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter, long New Jersey's second-largest firm by attorney head count, has ceded that position as it once again shed attorneys last year—and in the process took a slight step back in most financial metrics after a solid 2013.

The second-largest public liability result in 2014 was a $6.5 million settlement in Essex County obtained by attorney John O'Dwyer on behalf of a woman who lost her leg after she was hit by an NJ Transit bus.

The New Jersey Supreme Court on Feb. 18 handed one of the state's largest insurance carriers a pair of victories, ruling that the carrier did not act in bad faith when it rejected arbitration awards in uninsured motorist claims.

New York-based employment firm Jackson Lewis, which already has a considerable North Jersey presence, announced plans to open an office this spring in Monmouth County, N.J., and populate it with a five-lawyer labor & employment group just lured away from Giordano, Halleran & Ciesla of Red Bank, N.J.

An insurer was years too late in filing its legal malpractice claim against a Margolis Edelstein attorney who advised the carrier during settlement negotiations in a suit that eventually led to a $2 million bad-faith settlement, a federal judge has ruled.

The looming snowstorm—though it turned out to be much milder than expected—prompted New Jersey firms and branches to close early on Jan. 26 and stay closed the next day. But the ability to work remotely meant it was business as usual for most firms.

In a case being closely monitored by the business community, the New Jersey Supreme Court is considering whether so-called "watchdog employees" can be protected by the state's whistleblower law if they are fired for, in essence, doing their jobs.

Steven Metro, a former managing clerk in Simpson Thacher & Bartlett's New York office charged nearly a year ago with insider trading, has been indicted by a federal grand jury in Trenton. The indictment comes at the same time another key figure in the alleged insider trading scheme appears to have reached a plea deal with federal prosecutors.

Lawyers for the Connecticut Law Tribune and a divorcing mother seeking to prevent the newspaper from publishing an article about her custody fight filed briefs urging the Connecticut Supreme Court to hear the case.

When a judge first barred the Connecticut Law Tribune from publishing an article on a child custody dispute, First Amendment lawyers and media experts noted that prior restraint of the press was usually reserved for matters involving public danger or a national emergency.